Not that I’m admitting this is a degenerate meal, but it seems to be looked down on by everyone I know and haven’t convinced to try it yet.

  • Basic plain pasta shells, cooked normally
  • Drain water
  • Add like half a block at least of chopped-up basic cheddar and stir it while it melts
  • Stuff into six (this is the appropriate amount, trust me) Yorkshires
  • Throw the pan away due to burnt cheese

Easy peasy, lemon…cheezy? I await your judgement.

*whoever replies with a penis joke first, loses

    • @TeaHands@lemmy.worldOP
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      510 months ago

      Don’t knock it til you try it!

      Also, I’m eating salad right now so it all averages out really 😅

  • LifeBandit666
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    1010 months ago

    My wife makes Yorkie Puds with Sunday dinner because she’s a good wifey. I do the washing up, wait for everyone to leave the dining room, then pour golden syrup in the left over puddings and nomnomnom.

    Apparently it was something they did back int day anyway so it’s not really that degenerate, just old people food.

    Also FYI Yorkshire Puddings were meant to be an entrée to a full Sunday Dinner. Times were hard so you’d eat these to fill up a bit because there was fuck all int main course.

    • @TeaHands@lemmy.worldOP
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      610 months ago

      They’re basically just pancakes in a different shape so I see no problem with syruping them at all!

    • @nogooduser@lemmy.world
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      610 months ago

      I don’t understand. What does “left over” mean in this context? I normally understand it to mean that you didn’t eat them all but that can’t be right.

      • LifeBandit666
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        210 months ago

        Ah. I see you’re still making too few Yorkshire puddings. May I point out that i eat them, therefore not “left over” for long, literally gone before the washing-up.

    • @bandwidthcrisis@lemmy.world
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      310 months ago

      When I was growing up, I was given them with jam as a starter.

      Although we still had them with the Sunday dinner too. Filled with gravy was my favourite way, which we called a “paddling pool” because our puddings were fairly wide and flat with a raised edge. Must have been the shape of the pan we had.

  • Newtra
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    810 months ago

    I’m no food prude - I’ve even tried putting cheese in porridge out of curiosity, but seeing one savory flour product added to another makes me feel so unwell.

    What’s next? Noodle pies? Pancake sandwiches? Bao-filled gyoza? 🤢

    • @TeaHands@lemmy.worldOP
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      310 months ago

      I need to know about this cheesy porridge experiment. And shit I would absolutely demolish a noodle pie.

    • Newtra
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      210 months ago

      Anyway, to answer the question, if I had some Yorkshire puddings I’d probably go with bananas and soy sauce

  • Peekystar
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    510 months ago

    I make Yorkshire Puddings every Sunday, but I can’t say I ever get too adventurous with them, by which I mean I never do any deliberate experimentation. Any deviation from my standard recipe only comes by accident, but one such deviation has since become standard; one time when I fudged the ratio of milk to water a bit, I think by entirely forgetting the water, it was actually liked a bit better, so the ratio of water to milk has since been shifted.

    Back when my siblings went to university, though, we didn’t shift the quantities we made any, leaving some left over to be eaten as a snack later in the night, or in my brother’s case, as breakfast. Said leftover puddings were not eaten with gravy, as the main course puddings; my desert puddings were eaten with some maple syrup, whilst I think my brother made some kind of marmite sandwich out of them to have as breakfast.

    • appel
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      10 months ago

      On the origin of puddings by means of natural selection or the preservation of flavoured mistakes in the struggle for life

  • The Snark Urge
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    310 months ago

    Has anyone thought to combine chowder and Yorkshire puddings?

    What about as a form factor for coquilles St. Jacques?

  • j4yt33
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    210 months ago

    A truly English meal. So bad I wouldn’t even dare to cook it if I was starving and this was the only stuff left in the house. Even though that would be the only situation where “cooking” something like this would ever be appropriate

  • @nogooduser@lemmy.world
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    210 months ago

    We used to have carrots, cauliflower and broccoli in a cheese sauce with yorkies as a meal (this wasn’t to use up left over yorkies because that doesn’t happen in our house).

    • @TeaHands@lemmy.worldOP
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      410 months ago

      I was definitely expecting weirder answers to this question than “vegetables” or “sometimes I put more milk in than the recipe calls for” lol

  • @AA5B@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    From the other side of the pond, am I getting this right? “Yorkshire Pudding” is what we’d call a “bread bowl”, and there are some traditions about what is proper to put into the bowl? (Why would it not be any soup or dip?)

    • @TeaHands@lemmy.worldOP
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      610 months ago

      No! No no no no no. Yorkshire puddings are their own thing, not bread at all. They’re made of eggs, flour and milk, basically the same stuff as what we would call a pancake and you might call a “crepe” except sort of puffed up in the shape of…well…a Yorkshire pudding.

      All that said, I have totally used them to scoop up soup although this is definitely not their intended purpose.

    • @IchNichtenLichten@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      It’s not really a bread bowl, the closest thing over here is something called a popover. I usually make giant yorkshires though, with an entire roast dinner and gravy inside them.

    • @MurrayL@lemmy.world
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      210 months ago

      No, Yorkshire puddings are made of batter not bread! (But I can see why you might think that going from a photo alone)